Upstream

by: Omnomnomdom | Complete Story | Last updated Nov 6, 2021


Chapter 3
Extended Break


Chapter Description: After a meeting with her school dean, Vanessa undergoes some lifestyle changes.


Vanessa, for her part, never asked to be pulled out of school. She didn’t have a plan to salvage her situation, exactly, but quitting had never been a part of her being.

It was her mother, rather, who made the appointment with the school dean for the Wednesday of the girl’s vacation week, who dragged the pleading girl, adorned in a blue top and a white skirt that could scarcely cover her thick diaper, over to the school to determine her academic fate.

A few minutes before 9:00 a.m, the two arrived at the office and sat down across the dean’s desk. Vanessa’s mother offered her daughter a cup of water, but the sullen girl refused, crossing her arms and turning her head away from both her mother and the school administrator in front of them.

“Thank you for coming in today,” the dean began, typing away at his keyboard as his eyes shifted between the screen and the pair seated across from him. He was a plain man who showed little emotion beyond some requisite school spirit, and Vanessa had always regarded him as something of a pushover.

“Oh, thank you for having us,” Vanessa’s mother offered back, with the same patronizing cheer that seemed to permeate her voice for the past several months, “I think we’ve been putting off this conversation quite long enough, frankly.”

“Yes,” the Dean sighed, “I’m looking at Vanessa’s midterm results now, and I must say, these trends are quite concerning.”

“Oh, yes,” the girl’s mother agreed, matter-of-factly, “I think 12th grade might be just a little too much for her.”

“Yes, it’s been, uh, quite the downturn.” The dean cleared his throat. “And I understand she’s been having some social problems as well?”

“That’s correct, a little bit of embarrassment lately. We’ve been keeping her in - ” the mother shifted into a whisper, covering the side of her mouth with one hand, “d-i-a-p-e-r-s, but, you know, it just hasn’t been enough.”

Vanessa rolled her eyes instinctively, though in her mind she wondered what her mother had just said.

“Yes, I had heard that,” the man noted awkwardly, “so... what is it you’d like to do today?”

“Well, I thought it might be time to unenroll our little Vanessa, at least for now.”

Mom!” Vanessa finally chimed in, having heard the word enough times over the past few days to understand what it meant.

“Now, now, honey,” her mother waved off the blushing girl, “it’s quite clear that you’re simply not ready for this level right now. Or do I need to remind you how that little math test of yours went?”

“But, but…” the girl stammered, finding nothing to say in response.

Once the two were outside, though, she would continue her pleading.

“So what am I supposed to do?” she asked, frustrated, “just sit at home all day like I’m some baby? I’m not a baby, mom!”

“Oh, I’m sure you’re not,” the older woman assured her, though her condescending tone did little to sell the sentiment, “but we’ve just got to take a bit of a longer break to sort some things out, okay? Just a few days to rest and relax, and then we’ll figure out what to do. Does that sound fair to you?”

The girl pouted and harrumphed, but found little argument. She stood silently for a moment, arms crossed and face turned downward, before admitting defeat.

Fine.”

But the days at home turned to weeks, and soon Vanessa lost track of time altogether. She would continue to insist, loudly and repeatedly, that she wasn’t a baby, but the realities of her new lifestyle told a much different story.

Among the first concessions she made was allowing her mother to change her. The thought of it appalled the girl at first, but she knew she hadn’t been doing a very good job of changing herself, and her inability to tell when a change was needed was becoming a difficult obstacle to overcome. And so, she allowed herself to lay there, naked and prone, time and again, resigning herself to both the loss of independence and the realization that things would be easier - and more comfortable - without it.

As the girl spent her hours lying lazily at home, the tethers to Vanessa’s old life began to unravel. She couldn't do much to communicate by text, and her friends never had been fond of calling, so the only way left to keep up was through the pictures her classmates would post. But scrolling through offered only a stark reminder of what she had lost, so she soon shut off her social media altogether.

And when it came to her personal choices for entertainment, Vanessa found herself drifting far from the high-schooler tastes she once had. The procedurals and reality shows she once loved did nothing for her, too full of big words and complicated plotlines for her to follow, so she turned to the children's channels, where soft music and bright colors offered her simple comfort - even if the stories were still a bit hard to keep up with.

To keep herself company, Vanessa found herself turning more and more to her stuffed toy, Bertram, an oversized bear she had had since childhood. She appreciated, more and more, that he was soft and cuddly, that he would never judge the girl for her potty troubles or academic inabilities, and that he would always, faithfully, keep her secrets.

Soon, the girl would get more companions for Bertram, in the forms of a bunny, a fox, and a seal. Many more would follow, and eventually Vanessa’s mother would suggest putting in railings to keep the pile of stuffies from falling off of the bed - something the girl happily accepted before realizing what it actually meant.

Together with her stuffies in her new crib, Vanessa would watch hours upon hours of Blue's Clues and Octonauts, cheering for the cute animals on screen. Unfortunately, she would stubbornly tune out when the content turned educational, taking it as a personal offense to be learning from such things, all the while not realizing that those lessons on letters, numbers, and shapes were badly needed.

At night, when many of the distractions from her dramatic shift were unavailable, Vanessa found soothing comfort in the rhythm of suckling her thumb. Eventually, she would accept the pacifiers her mother bought for her, and her newfound habit would soon bleed into the daytime.

And as she slept, Vanessa found herself time and again on the same, familiar river, though it had become a far more tranquil experience. There was no eerie voice, no storm, no sign of wreckage. Only the girl in her basket, sitting peacefully by a waterfall as a stream rushed by. She would wake up wet, of course - and often messy as well - but the dreams could hardly be blamed for that now.

Eventually, those weeks turned into months. Winter came and went, its highlights a stuffed toy given for Christmas and a few angels made in the yard snow. Vanessa had fallen completely into her new rhythm, which made it all the more jarring when it was finally broken one morning in May.

“Honey,” her mother called from down the stairs, “your friends are here!”

Friends? The girl quickly apologized to Bertram - who was waiting for his tea - and scampered toward her bedroom door, struggling to stand from her legs’ disuse. But eventually she did get up, tossing her pacifier aside and fixing her skirt haphazardly over her diaper just as the handle turned.

Cassie was the first to walk in, her eyes wandering curiously around the room. Next was Amber, whose attention focused more on her old friend.

And then, a third figure came through the doorway, wearing a black dress and matching heels. Her hair was down, and she looked more polished than she did in the fall, but Vanessa recognized her immediately.

“What are you doing here?” Vanessa barked, crossing her arms as she shuddered instinctively.

“Oh, I’m sorry,” the girl in black said, a tinge of sweet-talk in her voice, “I don’t think we’ve actually met. I’m Fiona.” She reached out a hand, but Vanessa turned her head away and harrumphed.

“It’s okay, V,” Amber said softly, “she’s our friend now.”

“It’s true,” Cassie attested frankly, continuing to look around the room as she spoke. “she kinda joined the gang when you left.”

“That’s right!” Fiona smiled, “Turned out we had a lot in common, and my new besties here even helped me become prom queen!”

Vanessa snarled. “Is that why you’re here? To brag?”

“No, no, of course not!” the girl in black responded, “We came here to help you!”

“We heard you were kinda stuck here,” Amber added.

“And we found some stuff that might help you,” Cassie chimed in.

This was enough to make their old friend ease her arms. “You… you did?”

“We did,” said Amber, “musta been tough here, huh?”

“Uh huh!” Vanessa exclaimed, warmed and thrilled by the sudden sympathy, “I missed you guys, and it was so dumb what happened!

“It was like, my mom made me drop out just ‘cause I forgotted some stuff,” she continued, her childish mistakes crashing against her entitled tone, “and then after that she kept me here an’ she’s treated me like a baby but I’m not a baby an-”

“We know,” Cassie stopped her, “We think we know how you can get back to school.”

“No fun if you’re just here at home now, is it?” Fiona added with a smile.

“Nuh uh!” Vanessa agreed, completely oblivious to whose fun the girl in black was concerned with.

“Well,” Cassie continued, “there are some interviews next month for school placement - er, to see who gets to go where. And since you’re kind of a special case, we thought you could probably try and see if you could get back in somewhere.”

“Yeah!” Vanessa pumped her fists, “So I’m gonna get to go back to high school?”

“Ohhh, high school?” Fiona asked, glancing up and down at the girl in the obvious, drooping diaper, “Actually, we were thinking you might wanna aim a little lower…”


 


 

End Chapter 3

Upstream

by: Omnomnomdom | Complete Story | Last updated Nov 6, 2021

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vended · Nov 3, 2021

Nice trend! Will there eventually be AR? :]

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